Originally posted by: pm
Ok, I am confused. Are you guys joking, or is this something specific to an AMD microprocessor? -I don't have much experience with the specifics of AMD CPU's.
From the CPU-Z webpage:
CPU-Z is a freeware that gathers information on some of the main devices of your system.
CPU
* Name and number.
* Core stepping and process.
* Package.
* Core voltage.
* Internal and external clocks, clock multiplier.
* Supported instructions sets.
* Cache information.
Bold emphasis added by me. Why do so many replies say that it's not possible to read the stepping? There's a specific assembly instruction (CPUID) which does exactly this. It's not hard at all to read the stepping via software.
Buddy, no joke.
The "core stepping and process" info that CPU-Z provides is general information, and most likely not the detailed and specific info that the original poster was looking for.
To wit,
look at this. In the context of most overclocking discussions, when one asks for a CPU's stepping, we're dealing with a code that specifies, among other things, IMC version and manufacturing batch dates. According to statistics gathered by some, certain IMCs (and therefore CPUs of particular steppings) have more potential for high clocks than others.
So, to answer the original poster, there's no software that will tell you what stepping you've got, if you're looking for any sort of indication of your chip's overclocking potential.